One such trade-off is this: If we haul away such carbon-rich biomass for sequestration, will that carbon be missed in ecosystems that produced it?
Some forest conservation experts have raised this concern. In fact, some authorities in that field oppose commercialization of biochar made from forest “slash” that is removed to reduce fire risk associated with “ladder fuels” left in the forest. This usually consists of material like tree tips, branches, stumps, undergrowth, small trees that are judged to be crowding too densely to thrive. Critics fear incentivizing activities that rob needed carbon from forest floors.
Choosing a path through such trade-offs is a familiar challenge for land managers. Their conundrum is growing sharper as accelerating wildfires consume more forests (and sometimes towns). In response, forest managers, including many Tribes, are undertaking extensive “fuels management” work to reduce the heat and destructive power of fires when they break out.
That work isn’t cheap. Paying for it might be easier if they can find practical and sustainable ways to sell some of the forest biomass they remove (instead of, say, piling it up and burning it in place to avoid feeding the next wildfire). In many cases, the cheapest practical option is to burn those slash piles. That practice may undercut at some of the purpose of leaving the material in place: the fire lofts much (often most) of the C into the atmosphere.
In some cases, companies using forest wastes for carbon sequestration may be able to offer useful alternatives. Yet here too, the trade-offs continue: is carbon removal a higher priority than conserving carbon stocks in soil? Or vice versa? What modeling and measurement approaches can help to resolve this quandary and support sound decisions?
Global Ocean Health is an ocean organization, but we have worked closely with Tribes for many years, and our friends in the Tribes have drawn us ashore to join them in efforts to intercept trouble before it reaches the sea. We and several collaborators have just launched a learning network for Tribal forest managers around forest biomass and its potential uses in sequestration.
We would be glad to hear from folks in this group whose research and companies may open new options. In a field where trade-offs are difficult to avoid, we are interested in exploring ways of easing them —as you suggest, Greg— and ways of understanding the tradeoffs well enough to manage them intelligently.